On the effects of optically thick gas (disks) around massive stars
Rolf Kuiper, Harold W. Yorke

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that including the opacity of dust-free gas regions around massive stars enhances the flashlight effect, significantly influencing the disk's evolution, outflow structure, and accretion timescale.
Contribution
It introduces detailed simulations accounting for gas opacity in inner disk regions, revealing their critical role in massive star formation processes.
Findings
Inner dust-free gas regions are optically thick, affecting radiation shielding.
Enhanced shielding leads to a smaller outflow opening angle.
The accretion disk's lifetime and morphology are significantly impacted.
Abstract
Numerical simulations have shown that the often cited radiation pressure barrier to accretion onto massive stars can be circumvented, when the radiation field is highly anisotropic in the presence of a circumstellar accretion disk with high optical depth. Here, these studies of the so-called flashlight effect are expanded by including the opacity of the innermost dust-free but potentially optically thick gas regions around forming massive stars. In addition to frequency-dependent opacities for the dust grains, we use temperature- and density-dependent Planck- and Rosseland mean opacities for the gas. The simulations show that the innermost dust-free parts of the accretion disks are optically thick to the stellar radiation over a substantial fraction of the solid angle above and below the disk's midplane. The temperature in the shielded disk region decreases faster with radius than in a…
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